Sunday Reads … and now for something completely different
Posted: April 1, 2012 Filed under: morning reads, right wing hate grouups, Voter Ignorance, We are so F'd 27 Comments
or not…
I’ve spent some time wondering how a few segments of our population seem to have lost track of reality. We all have access to libraries and the world’s combined knowledge on our little laptops these days. Still, we seem to be surrounded by folks that are reading books in some alternate reality. So what’s the deal? Can you point to some one like Michelle Bachmann or Rick Santorum and then find something in their brains or their genes that’s not like ours? Or, did something go horribly wrong with them at some point in their life so they just prefer to live a life of fact denial?
Scientists have been looking at brain chemistry and composition and genetics and have found that certain traits tend to run in certain kinds of individuals that tend to do things a specific way. Take this example from Crime Times linking brain dysfunction to the traits of risk-avoidance or thrill-seeking and criminal behavior. Many of these kinds of behaviors have been linked to genes and certain regions of the brain.
Richard Ebstein and colleagues, at Herzog Memorial Hospital in Jerusalem, studied 124 unrelated Israelis. The researchers administered a test, devised by C. Robert Cloninger, which evaluated four personality traits: novelty seeking, harm avoidance, reward dependence, and persistence. They found that many subjects with high novelty-seeking scores had a slightly longer form of the D4 dopamine receptor (D4DR) gene than deliberate, reflective subjects. According to Ebstein, “this work provides the first replicated association between a specific genetic locus involved in neurotransmission and a normal personality trait.”
Jonathan Benjamin and colleagues, at the National Institutes of Mental Health, conducted a similar study involving 315 subjects who were evaluated on five personality measures: extroversion, openness to experience, neuroticism, agreeableness, and conscientiousness. None of these traits showed any association with the D4DR gene. Novelty-seeking, however, was again associated with the long version of the gene.
Behavior researchers note, however, that the D4DR gene variant accounts for only about 10 percent of the variation in the trait of novelty-seeking. Cloninger suggests, also, that each personality trait is modified by other traits; thus, a thrill-seeker who is also biologically inclined to be reward dependent, persistent, and optimistic may be a successful business executive, while a thrill-seeker who is low in both reward dependence and anxiety may turn to criminal pursuits.
Are there similar kinds of things at play in the brains and behavior of Bachman and Santorum? Here’s a preview of a book by Chris Mooney in a MoJo article titled “Diagnosing the Republican Brain”. Mooney shows some of the more looney tune entries in Conservapedia. It’s the right wing answer to Wikipedia and it’s just full of baloney science. There’s even some arguments that against the theory of relativity. Is absolute belief in absolute nonsense a medical or mental condition?
Take Conservapedia’s bizarre claim that relativity hasn’t led to any fruitful technologies. To the contrary, GPS devices rely on an understanding of relativity, as do PET scans and particle accelerators. Relativity works—if it didn’t, we would have noticed by now, and the theory would never have come to enjoy its current scientific status.
Little changed at Conservapedia after these errors were dismantled, however (though more anti-relativity “counter-examples” and Bible references were added). For not only does the site embrace a very different firmament of “facts” about the world than modern science, it also employs a different approach to editing than Wikipedia. Schlafly has said of the founding of Conservapedia that it “strengthened my faith. I don’t have to live with what’s printed in the newspaper. I don’t have to take what’s put out by Wikipedia. We’ve got our own way to express knowledge, and the more that we can clear out the liberal bias that erodes our faith, the better.”
You might be thinking that Conservapedia’s unabashed denial of relativity is an extreme case, located in the same circle of intellectual hell as claims that HIV doesn’t cause AIDS and 9-11 was an inside job. If so, I want to ask you to think again. Structurally, the denial of something so irrefutable, the elaborate rationalization of that denial, and above all the refusal to consider the overwhelming body of counterevidence and modify one’s view, is something we find all around us today.
Kevin Drum also looks at the idea that “conservatives” are just plain wired differently from the rest of us. I have always been at a loss for words for the number of stubborn believers in things that have been completely disabused by facts. The worst examples are the number of republicans that insist that Obama is a foreign born Muslim despite all evidence to the contrary. Drum thinks there has to be more than that because it seems that most of are worst examples appear to be American. Is there something uniquely nutty about our American Nuts?
I’ve long been sold on the idea that liberalism and conservatism are at least partly temperaments, and it’s those temperaments that lead us to different political conclusions rather than any kind of rational thinking process.
But the problem I have with Chris’s piece is this: temperament is universal, but Republicans are Americans. And it’s Republicans who deny global warming and evolution. European conservatives don’t. In fact, as near as I can tell, European conservatives don’t generally hold anti-science views any more strongly than European progressives.
I’m going to keep this post short because, as I said, I haven’t read the book. Maybe Chris addresses this at greater length there. But in the MoJo piece, at least, he doesn’t really address the question of why differences in brain wiring have produced such extreme anti-science views in American conservatives but not in European conservatives. So consider this an invitation, Chris. Is your contention that American conservatives are unique in some way? Or that American brains are wired differently? Or am I wrong about European conservatives?
Let me tell you a secret about Bible believers that I know because I was one. Most of them don’t read their Bibles. If they did, they would know that the biblical model of sex and marriage has little to do with the one they so loudly defend. Stories depicted in the Bible include rape, incest, master-slave sexual relations, captive virgins, and more. Now, just because a story is told in the Bible doesn’t mean it is intended as a model for devout behavior. Other factors have to be considered, like whether God commands or forbids the behavior, if the behavior is punished, and if Jesus subsequently indicates the rules have changed, come the New Testament.
Through this lens, you find that the God of the Bible still endorses polygamy and sexual slavery and coerced marriage of young virgins along with monogamy. In fact, he endorses all three to the point of providing detailed regulations. Based on stories of sex and marriage that God rewards and appears to approve one might add incest to the mix. Nowhere does the Bible say, “Don’t have sex with someone who doesn’t want to have sex with you.”
Furthermore, none of the norms that are endorsed and regulated in the Old Testament law – polygamy, sexual slavery, coerced marriage of young girls—are revised, reversed, or condemned by Jesus.
Yup. Polygamy is the norm. Most of the big patriarchs had concubines which are basically sex slaves. Is that what literalists like Pat Robertson see as our proper path?
Biblicalpolygamy.com has pages dedicated to 40 biblical figures, each of whom had multiple wives. The list includes patriarchs like Abraham and Isaac. King David, the first king of Israel may have limited himself to eight wives, but his son Solomon, reputed to be the wisest man who ever lived had 700 wives and 300 concubines! (1 Kings 11)
Concubines are sex slaves, and the Bible gives instructions on acquisition of several types of sex slaves, although the line between biblical marriage and sexual slavery is blurry. A Hebrew man might, for example, sell his daughter to another Hebrew, who then has certain obligations to her once she is used. For example, he can’t then sell her to a foreigner. Alternately a man might see a virgin war captive that he wants for himself.
In the book of Numbers (31:18) God’s servant commands the Israelites to kill all of the used Midianite women who have been captured in war, and all of the boy children, but to keep all of the virgin girls for themselves. The Law of Moses spells out a purification ritual to prepare a captive virgin for life as a concubine. It requires her owner to shave her head and trim her nails and give her a month to mourn her parents before the first sex act (Deuteronomy 21:10-14). A Hebrew girl who is raped can be sold to her rapist for 50 shekels, or about $580 (Deuteronomy 22:28-29). He must then keep her as one of his wives for as long as she lives.
Rape, incest, sexual slavery, and polygamy are all biblical values.
So, let me go back a moment to the widespread Republican notion that President Obama is some kind of Muslim Manchurian Candidate. TruthDig features an article on this by writer John Feffer. Once again, we have evidence that points to something completely different. More brain chemistry perhaps?
Despite right-wing charges, Obama has maintained a tight relationship with Israel and the Israeli leadership. As former New Republic editor Peter Beinart concludes, “The story of Obama’s relationship to [Prime Minister] Netanyahu and his American Jewish allies is, fundamentally, a story of acquiescence.”
It’s no surprise, then, that surveys in six Middle East countries taken just before and two months after the Cairo speech in 2009, the Brookings Institution and Zogby International discovered that the number of respondents optimistic about the president’s approach to the region had suffered a dramatic drop: from 51% to 16%. A 2011 Pew poll found that U.S. favorability ratings had continued their slide in Jordan (to 13%), Pakistan (12%), and Turkey (10%).
And yet, perversely, the hard right in the U.S. maintains that the Obama administration has behaved in quite the opposite manner. “There’s something sick about an administration which is so pro-Islamic that it can’t even tell the truth about the people who are trying to kill us,” Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich typically said while campaigning in Georgia.
Pro-Islamic? That’s news to the Islamic world.
But it’s nothing new to the world of the U.S. right wing, which portrays Obama as anti-Israel and weak in the face of Islamic terrorism. At best, the president emerges from these attacks as a booster of Islam; at worst, he is the leader of a genuine fifth column.
Although the administration’s policy on Iran is virtually indistinguishable from those of his Republican challengers, they have presented him as an appeaser. The president who “surged” in Afghanistan somehow becomes, through the magic of election-year sloganeering, a pacifist patsy. Although Obama never endorsed the location of the “Ground Zero mosque,” his opponents have suggested that he did. Although he was slow to withdraw support from U.S. allies in the Middle East like Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and Ben Ali in Tunisia, Republican candidates have accused the president of practically campaigning on behalf of the Islamist parties that have grown in influence as a result of the Arab Spring.
Barack Obama, the right wing has discovered, does not have to be Muslim to convince American voters that he has a suspect, even foreign, agenda. They have instead established a much lower evidentiary standard: he only has to act Muslim.
So, we’ve had some discussion about the relationship between Republicans and worship of Ayn Rand. George Monbiot insists that Rand wrote “A Manifesto for Psychopaths”. Ah, it’s the brain chemistry argument once more.
Rand’s is the philosophy of the psychopath, a misanthropic fantasy of cruelty, revenge and greed. Yet, as Gary Weiss shows in his new book Ayn Rand Nation, she has become to the new right what Karl Marx once was to the left: a demi-god at the head of a chiliastic cult(4). Almost one-third of Americans, according to a recent poll, have read Atlas Shrugged(5), and it now sells hundreds of thousands of copies every year.
Ignoring Rand’s evangelical atheism, the Tea Party movement has taken her to its heart. No rally of theirs is complete without placards reading “Who is John Galt?” and “Rand was right”. Ayn Rand, Weiss argues, provides the unifying ideology which has “distilled vague anger and unhappiness into a sense of purpose.” She is energetically promoted by the broadcasters Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Rick Santelli. She is the guiding spirit of the Republicans in Congress(6).
Like all philosophies, Objectivism is absorbed second-hand by people who have never read it. I believe it is making itself felt on this side of the Atlantic: in the clamorous new demands to remove the 50p tax band for the very rich, for example, or among the sneering, jeering bloggers who write for the Telegraph and the Spectator, mocking compassion and empathy, attacking efforts to make the world a kinder place.
It is not hard to see why Rand appeals to billionaires. She offers them something that is crucial to every successful political movement: a sense of victimhood. She tells them that they are parasitised by the ungrateful poor and oppressed by intrusive, controlling governments.
It is harder to see what it gives the ordinary teabaggers, who would suffer grievously from a withdrawal of government. But such is the degree of misinformation which saturates this movement and so prevalent in the US is Willy Loman Syndrome (the gulf between reality and expectations(7)) that millions blithely volunteer themselves as billionaires’ doormats. I wonder how many would continue to worship at the shrine of Ayn Rand if they knew that towards the end of her life she signed on for both Medicare and Social Security(8). She had railed furiously against both programmes, as they represented everything she despised about the intrusive state. Her belief system was no match for the realities of age and ill-health.
So see, Kevin, there are some of these nuts over on Monbiot’s side of the pond. Maybe they just haven’t gotten as well funded or well organized as our nutters. Which reminds me, there is some of this poor little oppressed-by-the-government me narrative that really bothers me. I can’t for the life of me figure out how the death of Trayvon Martin has been turned into a whining opportunity by white people who think that are really oppressed by pointing out institutional racism. It’s kind’ve like those silly people on Fox crying over the US having THE highest corporate tax rate while ignoring the effective corporate tax rate is THE lowest in the world. It’s the same with the people screaming about how every one is persecuting the faithful of the majority religion. Facts completely bear witness to these falsehoods, yet we can’t get rid of them and their silly hairshirts.
I guess they have a complete news channel and a lot of AM radio time to shill and recruit. Plus, there is all that Koch Money floating around just dying to fund phony science and economics. Maybe it’s because many of our nutters have air time and money. So, is it brain chemistry and genes? Vulnerability to hype? Mental Illness? Rational or irrational ignorance? I have no idea. But, I am getting tired of it. Oh, and btw, that’s a bacon cup, sauce and spoon up there at the top. It’s there to remind me that I need to read a few escape novels and think about something completely different for a change.
What’s on your mind, reading, and blogging list today?
Political Profiling: Pundits in Southland
Posted: March 19, 2012 Filed under: 2012 elections, 2012 presidential campaign, 2012 primaries, religious extremists, U.S. Politics, Voter Ignorance 5 Comments
I’ve lived down here in Lousyana for about 16 years now. I never expected to have a southern address. NEVER. I remember watching dinner time news as a kid. Two things stood out to me. The endless Vietnam War news and body counts were very disturbing. Watching angry white southerners fight desegregation with words and fire hoses was the other horrifying story. Who would want to live in a place like that? Today’s South is a complex place. There are a lot of folks down here that would prefer to live in the remote past. This political season appears to be bringing out the ones that want to erase modernity. They want to wrap their prejudices up in religion and the American Flag. As we wrap up the Southern Primary season this week with the Louisiana primary on Saturday, I’d just like to remind you that hateful rubes live everywhere. You probably won’t get that message by reading or watching the news.
The pundits and press have been chasing the Republican candidates around my neck of the woods and have come face-to-face with that brand of Southerner. A lot of economically and culturally insecure rednecks have not failed to disappoint them. You look around for a stereotype and you can surely find one. Here’s a little bit from a Santorum shindig up the road in Baton Rouge. My daughter lives about 2 miles from the location. This pastor is a living, breathing stereotype of the Southern Baptist preacher with the exception he’s changed just enough to bless a Roman Catholic Yankee. About 40 years ago, that would’ve been unheard of. Such is progress in some parts of our country.
Just in case you can’t stomach the whole thing, here’s the synopsis from Right Wing Watch.
Greenwell Springs Baptist Church pastor Dennis Terry introduced presidential candidate Rick Santorum and Family Research Council president Tony Perkins tonight in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, with a rousing speech railing against liberals and non-Christians and condemning abortion rights, “sexual perversion,” same-sex marriage and secular government. Terry said that America “was founded as a Christian nation” and those that disagree with him should “get out! We don’t worship Buddha, we don’t worship Mohammad, we don’t worship Allah!” Terry, who has a long history of attacks against the gay community, went on to criticize marriage equality for gays and lesbians, and said that the economy can only recover when we “put God back” in government.
We’re not the only ones that got this treatment. Santorum managed to whip out his man-on-dog wackiness in Illinois too. However, the punditry isn’t describing the audience in quite the same way.
But, here is an interesting conversation that’s come up during their trek down here. Should the media apologize for showing exactly how stupid voters are? Of course, you know exactly where the examples come from.
We arrived at this current round of stupidity-skepticism because of where the Republican primary ended up. Last week’s big contests were in Alabama, Mississippi, and Hawaii. The candidates, for unselfish reasons, opted to skip the last state and campaign in the Deep South. Pollsters and reporters, dutifully covering the race, discovered voters who believed that Barack Obama was a Muslim and that he was born in some foreign terrorist hotbed.
Nobody should have been surprised. Mississippi’s primary voters, some of the most conservative in the lower 48, are also some of the poorest. That wasn’t new. Sixty-three years ago, in Southern Politics in State and Nation, V.O. Key observed that “every other southern state finds some reason to fall back on the soul-satisfying exclamation, ‘Thank God for Mississippi.’ ” Public Policy Polling didn’t goose its results. It pointed out that most Mississippi Republicans believed untrue things that confirmed their suspicions about Barack Obama.
I trekked to Mississippi and Alabama last weekend for a few stories about the primaries. The only way I could have avoided hearing some confirmation biases was by locking myself in a leftover sensory depravation chamber from the Altered States set. While they were waiting for Newt Gingrich or Rick Santorum or Jeff Foxworthy to start talking, I asked why they thought Barack Obama had won in 2008. Sometimes a voter would go on a tangent and talk about the president’s unfamiliarity with John 3:16; sometimes they’d riff on how Mormonism wasn’t really Christianity. Some of what they said wound up in a slide show. The rest of it informed how I read Tuesday’s election results—Mitt Romney, who’d outspent everyone in both states, coming in third place.
Voters aren’t saints. When primaries get to certain parts of the country, they get disturbing, fast. In 2008, anybody with a digital camera could interview white Democrats who feared Barack Obama for the wrong reasons. One of the videos that went viral pitted a shocked reporter from the Real News against West Virginians who would have none of his logic.
“Why do you think he’s Muslim?” asked the reporter in one scene. “He wasn’t raised Muslim.”
“I don’t agree with that,” shrugged his subject.
That’s a report by David Weigel and Slate. Part of his piece was aimed at a Bill Maher program from last week. You can go watch a video and be appalled at some folks from Mississippi if you can take Maher’s smarmy, patronizing assholiness. Part of Weigals’ bit was inspired by this Politico article which doesn’t focus on the dumb Southerner sterotype but the dumb voters in general.
“The first lesson you learn as a pollster is that people are stupid,” said Tom Jensen of Public Policy Polling, a Democratic polling firm. “I tell a client trying to make sense of numbers on a poll that are inherently contradictory that at least once a week.”
Jensen, a Democrat, pointed to surveys showing that voters embraced individual elements of the Affordable Care Act, while rejecting the overall law, as an example of the political schizophrenia or simple ignorance that pollsters and politicians must contend with.
“We’re seeing that kind of thing more and more. I think it’s a function of increased political polarization and voters just digging in their heels and refusing to consider the opposing facts once they’ve formed an opinion about something,” said Jensen, who has generated eye-catching data showing many GOP primary voters still question the president’s religion and nationality. “I also think voters are showing a tendency to turn issues that should be factual or non-factual into opinions. If you show a Tennessee birther Obama’s birth certificate, they’re just going to say ‘well in my opinion he’s not a real American.’ It’s not about the birth certificate; it’s about expressing hatred for Obama in any form they can.”
But irrationality on policy issues transcends party lines and cuts across groups that feel differently about the president. Taken all together, the issue polling compiled so far in the 2012 cycle presents a sharp corrective to the candidates’ description of the race as a great debate placing two starkly different philosophies of government before an informed electorate.
In reality, the contest has been more like a game of Marco Polo, as a hapless gang of Republican candidates and a damaged, frantic incumbent try to connect with a historically fickle and frustrated electorate.
And “fickle” is a nice way of describing the voters of 2012, who appear to be wandering, confused and Forrest Gump-like through the experience of a presidential campaign. It isn’t just unclear which party’s vision they’d rather embrace; it’s entirely questionable whether the great mass of voters has even the most basic grasp of the details – or for that matter, the most elementary factual components – of the national political debate.
I’ve written a lot about the telling and embracing of outright lies this primary season. It’s party of a bigger, very human picture. People like to have their beliefs reinforced. It makes them feel better in a chaotic world. It’s why history is full of successful confidence men and games. None of that history is limited to the modern U.S. south. But, some times you wouldn’t know that when reading stuff that comes out of Washington DC or New York City. I’ve lived other places. I found rubes, bigots and idiots wherever I have lived. I’ve also found some genuinely loving and intelligent beings. The one thing that I have noticed that’s different about Southerners is that they are straightforward when it comes to expressing things. Head up to Michelle Bachmann’s Minnesota and you are going to find some of those same kinds of hateful attitudes. I guarantee it. I lived there too. You can read between their lines and find the same ick factor. For some reason, the Beltway and Manhattan set prefer to come down here and dredge up the Deliverance Set. I’m not sure if it’s just because it’s easier to find them down here or because that’s what they start looking for and find it. I guess voters aren’t the only ones that can be real stupid. Just remember, the worst of the culture warriors this election came from Minnesota and Pennsylvania. (Newt’s from Pennsylvanian too.)
It’s always in the Fine Print: War on Birth Control Edition
Posted: March 17, 2012 Filed under: birth control, Voter Ignorance, War on Women, We are so F'd, Women's Healthcare | Tags: insurance coverage of women's preventative health 13 CommentsJust when I thought the administration might actually stand up for medical science and women for a change, out comes the details on the HHS Insurance coverage including a large loophole for religious employers that want to force their narrow religious views on others. Actually, the loophole is so big you could drive a few tanks through it. Fortunately, it’s not a final draft so we still have time to scream bloody murder about it. Basically, all an offending organization has to do is ‘self insure itself.
Here’s a good explanation from Peterr over at FDL.
That “self insurance” loophole is a huge exemption. Look for any Roman Catholic institutions that aren’t self-insured already to set themselves up that way in short order.
If you wish to take HHS up on their offer to listen to comments on this proposal, page 3 of the pdf has four ways to submit your thoughts. The first is electronically, via http://www.regulations.gov. They say to “follow the instructions under the ‘More Search Options’ tab.” Unfortunately, regulations.gov is down for maintenance today. (You’ll probably need the file code: CMS-9968-ANPRM.)
But wait! There’s more from HHS on contraception. Again from NCR:
News of the changes also came as a separate ruling on student health insurance coverage was announced by the Department of Health and Human Services this afternoon. Under that ruling, health care plans for students would be treated like those of employees of colleges and universities — meaning the colleges will have to provide contraceptive services to students without co-pay.
Religiously affiliated colleges and universities, however, would be shielded from this ruling, according to a statement from the HHS.
Sandra Fluke and her classmates at Georgetown — a Roman Catholic institution — continue to be out of luck, it seems. Unlike the first announcement, this is a “final rule” [pdf] and not a proposal.
This came out on Friday so the chances of it hitting any major news outlet is pretty slim. Rush Limbaugh won’t be able to say take that you sluts until at least Monday. This wasn’t exactly announced in a Rose Garden Presser. If the administration really expects women to support the President’s re-election efforts then they really need to start treating us all with a little more respect. I’m beginning to get the feeling that politicians must think we don’t read or don’t vote.
They are Shocked, Shocked I tell you!
Posted: January 4, 2012 Filed under: John Birch Society in Charge, Voter Ignorance, We are so F'd | Tags: Election, US Politics 51 CommentsI’ve written a lot about my experience watching the Republican party gut support for the ERA, women’s reproductive rights, and eventually mainstream economics, science and rational
thought. I became an unintentional activist in the 1980s when the Nebraska State Chair of the Democratic Party signed me up for a Republican county convention and told me to go fight to keep women’s rights in the Republican Party Platform. Starry-eyed kid that I was, I said that I’d give it a try even though I really wanted to just work on the issues I cared about like the ERA. Every time I wanted to give up, she sent me back in to try again. She told me that nothing good would ever come to the country if both parties weren’t filled with reasonable people.
What I witnessed in the 1980s in Omaha, Nebraska was a series of elections where storefront churches sent women and men into Republican conventions and organizations with little white cards that basically had marching orders and talking points. The women had long, straight, lifeless hair and faces. The wore empire waist, gingham, home made dresses. I came in with my dress for success power suit and my newly minted economics MS. I was no match for what I discovered was Eric Hoffer’s True Believer in the flesh. I’d read that book for a High School English class and thought it only explained Nazis. The fembots read their objections to the ERA and to birth control and abortion access from their cards written by their male pastors with their nodding, smiling husbands at their side. I never considered sisterhood to be universal after that.
By about my second convention, I was being shouted down and called names that I won’t mention here. The Party establishment–mostly members of the Omaha Country Club–represented the city’s business interests, lawyers and doctors. They were completely unprepared for the ruckus. The meme for the decade was that platforms don’t matter. Let them put in whatever they want. They needed the votes for their own agendas. It was implied that all of this was lip service. I left the party quite a few years before Pat Robertson won Iowa but let me tell you I wasn’t surprised. My own run for the unicameral was an eye-opening experience. You’ve never experienced fascism in quite a personal way until you have a campaign run against you from the pulpits of catholic and evangelical churches. Those folks will do and say anything, literally. Forget Stalin, christofascists believe their ends justify the use of any means necessary, and the scary thing is that their neighbors will believe them. It’s nothing less than a crusade of lies, anger and mean.
I’ve been reading The Politics Blog written by Charles P. Pierce at Esquire Magazine with encouragement from SkyDancing reader Ralph. He’s got a great piece up today on how the chickens are coming home to roost for those country club Republicans that really, really want Mitt Romney or some other country club Republican to be likable enough to beat Barack Obama. The powers that be want to gut Frank-Dodd and ensure that we can drill relentlessly in whatever garden of Eden they choose. They are fully aware that independents like me will run from the likes of Santorum and Perry. Rove and his cronies are salivating over the vulnerability of the president. They are also savvy enough to know they are riding in a clown car that they bought and paid for with funds and fundie ass-kissing. They should’ve thought a bit more about the ride before they gave the keys to insane people.
Precisely how many times are we going to be treated to public expressions of mock horror from Important Conservatives that 40 years of allying themselves with nativist hooligans, anti-intellectual crackpots, Christomaniacs, and the sad detritus of American apartheid finally has produced a field of presidential candidates that these same Important Conservatives find less than adequate? Once again, the whole exercise requires both the writer and the reader to ignore the obvious consequences of four decades of political history and conclude that the Republican party has lost its mind only recently. And it requires both the writer and reader to convince themselves that out there, somewhere, is a superior candidate to the ones presently available, and to ignore the obvious conclusion that titans like Chris Christie, Mitch Daniels, Jeb Bush, and Paul Ryan chose not to run because they suspected they might get beaten like gongs, if not by President Obama, then by the wholly unacceptable Willard Romney.
And Bobby Jindal? Just stop, okay? You’re killing me.
(By the way, Politico? Quoting Fred Barnes on anything is the recognized international I Got Nothin’ signal. Quoting Fred Barnes on American politics is the functional equivalent of asking a fruit bat what it thinks about the trade deficit.)
Yes, the stern father is trying to get the keys to the clown car back from people completely dedicated to a crusade to turn the US into something completely disdained by the founders; a theocracy. The delightful Pierce read is a response to this “think” piece at Politico on the batch of wackos and the dull ideal-less Willard that have gone in and come out of Iowa. Not one of them is wholly acceptable to the mishmash of sociopaths associated with today’ Republican party. Some are anathema to the Tea Party. Santorum and Gingrich are the ultimate corrupt, lobbying insiders. Others are not trusted by the christofascist crusaders. The two sane candidates on deck are Mormons and way too reasonable–in the manner of reason that only today’s Republican faithful can define–and way too attached to reality to be acceptable to a group of people who reject modern civilization. Huntsman and Romney can’t be enthusiastically elected in today’s pared down Republican party which requires a pathological detachment from reality. Examine the evidence of Eric Cantor, who went into a state of apoplexy on 60 minutes last week when being told that Ronald Reagan raised taxes 12 times and compromised with Democrats many more times than that.
This is what happens when you sell your souls for votes and unfettered greed. We’re in about the 7th ring of a Republican-made hell right now and the country club dudes want out of their Faustian bargain so they can stay there. Their compadres at the wheel want to go straight to ring 10. We’re living their Divine Comedy with the rich grabbing everything, endless unemployment driving wages down, and absolute lax enforcement of the remaining Nixonian regulation. Yet, they could capture both the Senate and the White House.
Republicans this year find themselves in something of generational slackwater in this election cycle.
There are younger, talented Republicans, such as Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who judged themselves not ready to run for president this time.
There were also a number of potentially formidable Republican governors — Jeb Bush, Haley Barbour, Mitch Daniels — of an older generation who chose for various reasons not to run.
This left Romney not competing against the most promising presidential-level talent this time.
“It’s not like the old days of Richard Nixon, Nelson Rockefeller, Ronald Reagan,” said Washington Examiner columnist Michael Barone. “They were all pretty well-known candidates. It’s just sort of a weak field.”
Weekly Standard editor Fred Barnes went a step further, asking: “Would Romney be odds-on to win the nomination if Mitch Daniels or Chris Christie or Paul Ryan or Jeb Bush were in the race?
Not likely.”
That doesn’t mean, Barnes and others argued, that Romney couldn’t grow into a more forceful standard-bearer for his party in the process of campaigning against President Barack Obama.
Whoever wrote this piece has never spent any serious time researching Bobby “the exorcist” Jindal who has absolutely gutted our state’s universities and hospitals so that he can say he didn’t increase the number of people on the state’s payroll. They haven’t checked the state’s unemployment rate which has doubled under his watch. They certainly haven’t listened to him speak. You have to be a speed listener to do that. It takes special powers Then, there is Paul Ryan that’s as big of a crank as any one I’ve seen in public office recently. Even Newt Gingrich recognized his entitlement reforms as right wing engineering before he was called out by the other cranks.
This is the problem. The Republican Party has spent 40 years purging their ranks. There is nothing left but candidates so flexible with their positions they’ve been on every side of every issue or people so frightening that you wouldn’t want them near your children. Consider Senator David Vitter whose record is simply impeccable for every one in the clown car. Ask people if they’d want to spend time with him and every one runs for the door and hides their daughters. Consider the number of Republicans from which you’d hide your young sons. You name any Republican these days and you can point to either the freewheeling old school hypocrisy or the creepy “I don’t believe in science, math, history, and reality” factor. They elect soci0paths in safe districts because they are reliable voters for the party’s special interests.
Consider Bachmann’s insistence today–as she headed for the hatchback door–that Obama is a socialist as best represented by Obamacare. It seems her evangelical fundie friends just couldn’t do it for a woman. She hit the eject button. But, she’s still doling out the crazy. Consider that Obamacare with its individual mandate is the Heritage Foundation/Republican Senate Health care response to Hillary Clinton’s health care study. Republicans got a Republican plan that both Romney and Gingrich supported in the 1990s because it was the Republican plan and came from the Heritage Foundation. Some how they’ve pinned it on Obama and deemed it socialist. How can any one reconcile this with out some part of their brain imploding? The individual mandate was the hallmark of the Republican plan. All you have to do is check the Legislative record or the press articles of the day. It was one of the things Obama supposedly opposed when he ran as a Democrat. How can any Republican candidate that’s had enough experience to be the president run away from former Republican policy initiatives and conveniently forget that Obama opposed it before he loved it?
The concept of the individual health insurance mandate originated in 1989 at the conservative Heritage Foundation. In 1993, Republicans twice introduced health care bills that contained an individual health insurance mandate. Advocates for those bills included prominent Republicans who today oppose the mandate including Orrin Hatch (R-UT), Charles Grassley (R-IA), Robert Bennett (R-UT), and Christopher Bond (R-MO). In 2007, Democrats and Republicans introduced a bi-partisan bill containing the mandate.
In 2008, then presidential candidate Barack Obama was opposed to the individual mandate. He stated the following in a Feb. 28, 2008 interview on the Ellen DeGeneres show about his divergent views with Hillary Clinton:
“Both of us want to provide health care to all Americans. There’s a slight difference, and her plan is a good one. But, she mandates that everybody buy health care. She’d have the government force every individual to buy insurance and I don’t have such a mandate because I don’t think the problem is that people don’t want health insurance, it’s that they can’t afford it. So, I focus more on lowering costs. This is a modest difference. But, it’s one that she’s tried to elevate, arguing that because I don’t force people to buy health care that I’m not insuring everybody. Well, if things were that easy, I could mandate everybody to buy a house, and that would solve the problem of homelessness. It doesn’t.”
The Republican clowncar ride these days enforces a strict policy of historical amnesia. Pierce sees the contortionist sideshow that’s become the Romney candidacy. Romney’s put himself into a denial pretzel to runaway from Republican past.
It is at moments like this in which I feel just the faintest twinge of sympathy for our man Willard. I mean, what more does the poor sap have to do? He’s walked back his previous ironclad commitments and then he walked back many of his own walk-backs. He has abased himself before all the steaming iron gods of modern conservatism. He’s grabbed control of the wild-west landscape produced by the Citizens United decision and demonstrated that he has absolutely no conscience regarding using anonymous corporate button men on the opposition while pretending all the while that he’s Michael Corleone at his nephew’s christening. And still he’s got people sniping at him, and dreaming their dreamy dreams about thuggish governors of New Jersey, diminutive governors of Indiana, and zombie-eyed granny-starvers from Wisconsin. It can’t be easy being the cousin that every Important Conservative winds up having to take to the prom.
Willard, if you want to play up to today’s Republicans, you’re going to have to literally have a come to Jesus moment. Like Bobby Jindal, you’re going to have to give up the religion of your family and force your wife and kids to convert. You’re going to have to say you were deceived by Satan and that explains the entire Massachusetts Governor thing. It almost worked for Newt right? The best deal is that you can contort yourself into the new Willard and Newt will forever be Newt.
I have no intention of ever voting Republican again. That does not mean, however, that the Democratic Party gets my vote by default as I think Obama and others are expecting. I am clearly looking for something else. I do not intend to sell out all of my education and principles to settle for the anti-war but otherwise incredibly cracked crackpot Ron Paul who is a throwback to the confederacy. There is no way Donald Trump’s narcissism and hype traps me into forgetting how he took all that parental money and government money and parlayed it into bankruptcy. He is not the greatest showman on earth. Nader pretty much encompasses all of those complaints and more. Bloomberg? Forget about it! This could very well be the first major election that I will give a resounding pass. In that case, consider Mary Landrieu a lost cause. She’ll never squeak through in today’s Louisiana where the electorate was changed by a Rovian exodus. The only thing that could drive me to the polls is fear of Mitch McConnell as majority leader. Is this what the democratic experience has come to?
This maybe the worst election year ever.







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